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Brian Cahn

'What're you gonna do?' Democrats united on Trump, but divided by race, healthcare and drugs

The 10 Democratic candidates debated each other as impeachment hearings into Trump’s dealings with Ukraine rumbled on.

DIVIDES BETWEEN DEMOCRATS vying to challenge President Donald Trump in the 2020 election were laid bare in a combative debate last night, as the campaign’s rising star Pete Buttigieg acknowledged he faced challenges in attracting black voters.

Buttigieg, the contest’s youngest candidate who occupies the same moderate lane as frontrunner Joe Biden, offered a unifying message as a way to bring Democrats and Republicans toward a broad political middle.

Democrats can seize a majority on issues like immigration and guns “if we can galvanize, not polarize that majority,” Buttigieg told the debate in Georgia.

But after an opening phase dominated by talk of impeachment of Trump, participants in the fifth Democratic debate locked horns over the costly universal healthcare programme supported by liberal senators Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders.

Buttigieg said:

I believe that commanding people to accept that option, whether we wait three years as Senator Warren has proposed or whether you do it right out of the gate is not the right approach to unify the American people around a very, very big transformation that we now have an opportunity to deliver.

Former vice president Biden also took aim at the trillion-dollar reform, saying it would be wiser to build on existing Obamacare and provide a public option.

“The fact is that right now the vast majority of Democrats do not support Medicare for All,” Biden said.

Biden is the face of the Democratic Party establishment and is the current frontrunner. He turned 77 yesterday and appeared to stumble over his words on several occasions, including during his opening remarks.

Buttigieg, the military veteran mayor of South Bend, Indiana, who at 37 is less than half Biden’s age, sought to paint himself as a young outsider who should be elected commander-in-chief despite his slender resume.

“I get it’s not traditional establishment Washington experience, but I would argue we need something very different right now,” Buttigieg, mayor of a small city in Indiana, told his rivals.

But when pressed by Senator Kamala Harris, the only black woman in the race, about his low polling among African-American voters, Buttigieg acknowledged he had yet to convince one of the party’s most important constituencies.

“I welcome the challenge of connecting with black voters in America who don’t yet know me,” said Buttigieg, the first major openly-gay US presidential candidate.

While I do not have the experience of ever having been discriminated against because of the colour of my skin, I do have the experience of sometimes feeling like a stranger in my own country.

Biden leads in national polling, followed by Warren and Sanders.

But Buttigieg has cracked into the top tier in the past month, and now tops the polls in Iowa which stages the first nomination contest in February.

Warren was the candidate to watch last month but her campaign has plateaued.

She has made headway by pledging to end a system that she described during the debate as working “better for… the rich and well-connected, and worse and worse for everyone else.

“I’m tired of freeloading billionaires,” she said.

As the 10 qualifying candidates rumbled in their nationally televised showdown, dominating the political discourse is the high-stakes impeachment hearings into Trump’s dealings with Ukraine.

Democrats accuse Trump of conditioning military aid and a White House meeting on Kiev’s announcing investigations of Biden and his son Hunter, who worked with a Ukrainian energy company while his father was vice president.

But some candidates warned that obsessing over the president could sabotage Democrats’ efforts.

“We cannot simply be consumed by Donald Trump,” Sanders said. “Because if we are, you know what? We’re going to lose the election.”

Trump ‘punked’ 

With attention directed at Capitol Hill, the debate run-up has been low-key.

But candidates lept at the chance to critique Trump’s foreign policy on North Korea and Saudi Arabia.

Harris landed a sharp blow, saying Trump “got punked” by North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un.

One of the most heated exchanges came when Buttigieg ridiculed long-shot candidate Tulsi Gabbard for meeting “a murderous dictator” like Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad as the mild-mannered mayor snapped back at criticism over recent comments on Mexico.

There were lighter moments too. Senator Cory Booker, known for his moral calls to action, used humor to upbraid Biden for recently saying he opposed legalizing marijuana nationally.

“I thought you might have been high when you said it,” said Booker, who went on to declare that America’s war on drugs has been “a war on black and brown people.”

Senator Amy Klobuchar, entrepreneur Andrew Yang and investor-turned-activist Tom Steyer rounded out the contenders.

The field may soon expand to include billionaire businessman and former New York mayor Michael Bloomberg who has recently filed ballot paperwork in two states.

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    Mute Anthony O'Donnell
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    Oct 17th 2011, 8:48 AM

    Shrinking animals ,oh my lord people will believe anything ………. it is October not the 1st of April isn’t it.

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    Mute Brian Ó Dálaigh
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    Oct 17th 2011, 10:36 AM

    Anthony, it is a well documented fact that atmospheric and environmental changes are inextricable linked to the size of animal. If we take a large section of earth’s history, the age of dinosaurs, this period was linked with very high oxygen levels. Much more so than exists today. The presence of oxygen enabled many of the earth’s animals to grow to extraordinary sizes. This size of animal is simply not possible in today’s climate because there is simply not enough oxygen to sustain the size. The only real exception is the Blue Whale. Environmental factors also influence size. Take the African elephant as an example. A group of these were stranded on islands in the Mediterranean at the end of the last Ice Age. When these islands became separated from the African continent it lead to a process whereby the elephants became miniature. These mini elephants, while now extinct, are well documented by the Romans and the Greeks. Look at Flores Man in Indonesia, a species of human believed to be the source of many hobbit, dwarf, etc.myths of Asia. Isolation on an island, combined with other environmental factors stunted its growth. The same can be seen with the Twa people of Congo, Burundi and Rwanda who still exist today. We know many factors stunt growth, including carbon monoxide (found in cigarettes), so how is it a step too far to believe that our pumping of noxious and toxic chemicals into the atmosphere is not also contributing to shrinking animals? After all, it is also well documented that we have changed our climate, our environment. Heck, we’ve even caused seas such as the Aral Sea (formerly 68,000 km2) to all but vanish. How do you think the animals in that area are surviving? In cases such as this, it’s the smallest animals, those that need less to survive, that will be successful procreators. This inevitably leads to shrinking animals.

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    Mute Anthony O'Donnell
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    Oct 17th 2011, 6:34 PM

    Food for thought Brian , at this stage i am a cynic about anything i read in the media but you have made me think .

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    Mute Annette Mcloughlin
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    Oct 17th 2011, 7:45 PM

    Very interesting article Brian ,have just seen it today and must say NOTHING would surprise me in this day and age

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